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Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 8, Issue 5 | Pages 207 - 215
1 May 2019
Key S Scott G Stammers JG Freeman MAR Pinskerova V Field RE Skinner J Banks SA

Objectives

The medially spherical GMK Sphere (Medacta International AG, Castel San Pietro, Switzerland) total knee arthroplasty (TKA) was previously shown to accommodate lateral rollback while pivoting around a stable medial compartment, aiming to replicate native knee kinematics in which some coronal laxity, especially laterally, is also present. We assess coronal plane kinematics of the GMK Sphere and explore the occurrence and pattern of articular separation during static and dynamic activities.

Methods

Using pulsed fluoroscopy and image matching, the coronal kinematics and articular surface separation of 16 well-functioning TKAs were studied during weight-bearing and non-weight-bearing, static, and dynamic activities. The closest distances between the modelled articular surfaces were examined with respect to knee position, and proportions of joint poses exhibiting separation were computed.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 98-B, Issue SUPP_10 | Pages 51 - 51
1 May 2016
Steinbrueck A Schroeder C Woiczinski M Tatjana M Fottner A Pinskerova V Mueller P Jansson V
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Introduction

Despite consequent advancement in Total Knee Arthroplasty (TKA) up to 20% of patients are not satisfied after having been operated. Beside correct implantation, the design of the TKA-system is supposed to be a key factor of a successful TKA. Consequently it has been tried to restore natural kinematics by the design of the prosthesis. A medially stabilized design therefore is supposed to allow a lateral translation with a medial pivot.

Objectives

Our study compared posterior stabilized (PS) with medially stabilized (MS) TKA-design in terms of kinematics, femorotibial and patellofemoral contact patterns in vitro.


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 5, Issue 3 | Pages 80 - 86
1 Mar 2016
Scott G Imam MA Eifert A Freeman MAR Pinskerova V Field RE Skinner J Banks SA

Objectives

Throughout the 20th Century, it has been postulated that the knee moves on the basis of a four-bar link mechanism composed of the cruciate ligaments, the femur and the tibia. As a consequence, the femur has been thought to roll back with flexion, and total knee arthroplasty (TKA) prostheses have been designed on this basis. Recent work, however, has proposed that at a position of between 0° and 120° the medial femoral condyle does not move anteroposteriorly whereas the lateral femoral condyle tends, but is not obliged, to roll back – a combination of movements which equates to tibial internal/ femoral external rotation with flexion. The aim of this paper was to assess if the articular geometry of the GMK Sphere TKA could recreate the natural knee movements in situ/in vivo.

Methods

The pattern of knee movement was studied in 15 patients (six male: nine female; one male with bilateral TKAs) with 16 GMK Sphere implants, at a mean age of 66 years (53 to 76) with a mean BMI of 30 kg/m2 (20 to 35). The motions of all 16 knees were observed using pulsed fluoroscopy during a number of weight-bearing and non-weight-bearing static and dynamic activities.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXXVII | Pages 442 - 442
1 Sep 2012
Field R Alazzawi S Field M Bardakos N Pinskerova V Freeman M
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Introduction

Femorotibial malalignment exceeding ±3° is a recognised contributor of early mechanical failure after total knee replacement (TKR). The angle between the mechanical and anatomical axes of the femur remains the best guide to restore alignment. We investigated where the femoral head lies relative to the pelvis and how its position varies with respect to recognised demographic and anatomic parameters. We have tested the hypothesis of the senior author that the position of the centre of the femoral head varies very little, and if its location can be identified, it could serve to outline the mechanical axis of the femur without the need for sophisticated imaging.

Patients & Methods

The anteroposterior standing, plain pelvic radiographs of 150 patients with unilateral total hip replacements were retrospectively reviewed. All patients had Tönnis grade 0 or 1 arthritis on the non-operated hip joint. All radiographs were obtained according to a standardised protocol. Using the known diameter of the prosthetic head for calibration, the perpendicular distance from the centre of the femoral head of the non-operated hip to the centre of pubic symphysis was measured with use of TraumaCad software. Anatomic parameters, including, but not limited to, the diameter of the intact femoral head, were also measured. Demographic data (gender, age, height, weight) were retrieved from our database.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 91-B, Issue 6 | Pages 830 - 834
1 Jun 2009
Pinskerova V Samuelson KM Stammers J Maruthainar K Sosna A Freeman MAR

There has been only one limited report dating from 1941 using dissection which has described the tibiofemoral joint between 120° and 160° of flexion despite the relevance of this arc to total knee replacement. We now provide a full description having examined one living and eight cadaver knees using MRI, dissection and previously published cryosections in one knee.

In the range of flexion from 120° to 160° the flexion facet centre of the medial femoral condyle moves back 5 mm and rises up on to the posterior horn of the medial meniscus. At 160° the posterior horn is compressed in a synovial recess between the femoral cortex and the tibia. This limits flexion. The lateral femoral condyle also rolls back with the posterior horn of the lateral meniscus moving with the condyle. Both move down over the posterior tibia at 160° of flexion.

Neither the events between 120° and 160° nor the anatomy at 160° could result from a continuation of the kinematics up to 120°. Therefore hyperflexion is a separate arc. The anatomical and functional features of this arc suggest that it would be difficult to design an implant for total knee replacement giving physiological movement from 0° to 160°.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 91-B, Issue SUPP_I | Pages 4 - 5
1 Mar 2009
Lankester B Cottam H Pinskerova V Eldridge J Freeman M
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Introduction: The medial tibial plateau is composed of two relatively flat facets. An anterior upward sloping “extension facet” (EF) articulates with the medial femoral condyle from 0 to 20–the stance phase of gait (in Man but not in other mammals). Anatomical variation in this area might be responsible for antero-medial osteoarthritis (AMOA).

This paper reports the angle between the EF and the horizontal (the extension facet angle- EFA) in normal knees and in knees with early AMOA.

Method: MRI reports were searched to identify patients with acute rupture of the ACL on the assumption that they had anatomically normal tibiae (46 males and 18 females) and patients with MRI evidence of early AMOA without bone loss (11 males and 9 females).

A sagittal image at the midpoint of the femoral condyle was used to determine the EFA.

Results: The EFA in normal tibiae is 14 +/− 5 (range 3–25). The angle is unrelated to age. The EFA in individuals with early AMOA is 19 +/− 4 (range 13–26). The difference is significant (p< 0.001).

Discussion: There is a wide variation in the EFA in normal knees which is unrelated to age.

There is an association between an increased EFA (ie a steeper EF) and MRI evidence of AMOA. Although a causal link is not proven, we speculate that a steeper angle increases the duration of loading on the EF in stance and tibio-femoral interface shear. This may initiate cartilage breakdown.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 90-B, Issue SUPP_III | Pages 577 - 577
1 Aug 2008
Lankester B Cottam H Pinskerova V Eldridge J Freeman M
Full Access

Introduction: The medial tibial plateau is composed of two relatively flat facets. An anterior upward sloping “extension facet” (EF) articulates with the medial femoral condyle from 0 to 20° – the stance phase of gait (in Man but not in other mammals). A horizontal “flexion facet” contacts the femur from 20° to full flexion. Anatomical variation in this area might be responsible for the initiation of antero-medial osteoarthritis (AMOA).

This paper reports the angle between the EF and the horizontal (the extension facet angle - EFA) in normal knees and in knees with early AMOA.

Method: MRI reports were searched to identify patients with acute rupture of the ACL on the assumption that they had anatomically normal tibiae (46 males and 18 females) and patients with MRI evidence of early AMOA without bone loss (11 males and 9 females).

A sagittal image at the midpoint of the femoral condyle was used to determine the EFA. Repeat measurements were taken by two observers.

Results: The EFA in normal tibiae is 14 +/− 5° (range 3 – 25°). The angle is unrelated to age. The EFA in individuals with early AMOA is 19 +/− 4° (range 13 – 26°). The difference is highly significant (p< 0.001).

Discussion: There is a wide variation in the EFA in normal knees that is unrelated to age.

There is an association between an increased EFA (ie a steeper EF) and MRI evidence of AMOA. Although a causal link is not proven, we speculate that a steeper angle increases the duration of loading on the EF in stance and tibio-femoral interface shear. This may initiate cartilage breakdown.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 90-B, Issue 3 | Pages 330 - 333
1 Mar 2008
Lankester BJA Cottam HL Pinskerova V Eldridge JDJ Freeman MAR

From a search of MRI reports on knees, 20 patients were identified with evidence of early anteromedial osteoarthritis without any erosion of bone and a control group of patients had an acute rupture of the anterior cruciate ligament. The angle formed between the extension and flexion facets of the tibia, which is known as the extension facet angle, was measured on a sagittal image at the middle of the medial femoral condyle.

The mean extension facet angle in the control group was 14° (3° to 25°) and was unrelated to age (Spearman’s rank coefficient, p = 0.30, r = 0.13). The mean extension facet angle in individuals with MRI evidence of early anteromedial osteoarthritis was 19° (13° to 26°, SD 4°). This difference was significant (Mann-Whitney U test, p < 0.001).

A wide variation in the extension facet angle was found in the normal control knees and an association between an increased extension facet angle and MRI evidence of early anteromedial osteoarthritis. Although a causal link has not been demonstrated, we postulate that a steeper extension facet angle might increase the duration of loading on the extension facet during the stance phase of gait, and that this might initiate failure of the articular cartilage.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 86-B, Issue 6 | Pages 925 - 931
1 Aug 2004
Pinskerova V Johal P Nakagawa S Sosna A Williams A Gedroyc W Freeman MAR

MRI studies of the knee were performed at intervals between full extension and 120° of flexion in six cadavers and also non-weight-bearing and weight-bearing in five volunteers. At each interval sagittal images were obtained through both compartments on which the position of the femoral condyle, identified by the centre of its posterior circular surface which is termed the flexion facet centre (FFC), and the point of closest approximation between the femoral and tibial subchondral plates, the contact point (CP), were identified relative to the posterior tibial cortex.

The movements of the CP and FFC were essentially the same in the three groups but in all three the medial differed from the lateral compartment and the movement of the FFC differed from that of the CP. Medially from 30° to 120° the FFC and CP coincided and did not move anteroposteriorly. From 30° to 0° the anteroposterior position of the FFC remained unchanged but the CP moved forwards by about 15 mm. Laterally, the FFC and the CP moved backwards together by about 15 mm from 20° to 120°. From 20° to full extension both the FFC and CP moved forwards, but the latter moved more than the former. The differences between the movements of the FFC and the CP could be explained by the sagittal shapes of the bones, especially anteriorly.

The term ‘roll-back’ can be applied to solid bodies, e.g. the condyles, but not to areas. The lateral femoral condyle does roll-back with flexion but the medial does not, i.e. the femur rotates externally around a medial centre. By contrast, both the medial and lateral contact points move back, roughly in parallel, from 0° to 120° but they cannot ‘roll’.

Femoral roll-back with flexion, usually imagined as backward rolling of both condyles, does not occur.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 86-B, Issue 3 | Pages 450 - 456
1 Apr 2004
Nakagawa S Johal P Pinskerova V Komatsu T Sosna A Williams A Freeman MAR

The posterior cruciate ligament (PCL) was imaged by MRI throughout flexion in neutral tibial rotation in six cadaver knees, which were also dissected, and in 20 unloaded and 13 loaded living (squatting) knees. The appearance of the ligament was the same in all three groups. In extension the ligament is curved concave-forwards. It is straight, fully out-to-length and approaching vertical from 60° to 120°, and curves convex-forwards over the roof of the intercondylar notch in full flexion. Throughout flexion the length of the ligament does not change, but the separations of its attachments do.

We conclude that the PCL is not loaded in the unloaded cadaver knee and therefore, since its appearance in all three groups is the same, that it is also unloaded in the living knee during flexion. The posterior fibres may be an exception in hyperextension, probably being loaded either because of posterior femoral lift-off or because of the forward curvature of the PCL. These conclusions relate only to everyday life: none may be drawn with regard to more strenuous activities such as sport or in trauma.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 85-B, Issue 1 | Pages 45 - 51
1 Jan 2003
Skinner JA Todo S Taylor M Wang JS Pinskerova V Scott G

We have compared the survival and radiological outcome at ten years after total hip replacement using two techniques for preparing the femoral canal. The same prosthesis was used throughout and all operations were performed by the same surgical team. In technique 1 the canal was over-reamed by 2 mm and in technique 2 it was reamed to the same size as the prosthesis. Technique 1 was performed on 92 patients and technique 2 on 97 patients.

The survival at ten years was 97.2% (90.6 to 99.2) for technique 1 and 98.8% (92.9 to 99.8) for technique 2. Vertical migration was greater in technique 1 (1.8 mm versus 1.0 mm at five years; p = 0.36). There were significantly more lytic lesions and radiolucent lines at five years (p = 0.0061) with technique 1. We conclude that technique 2 is not worse and may produce better long- term results than current teaching suggests.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 84-B, Issue 4 | Pages 607 - 613
1 May 2002
Martelli S Pinskerova V

We report a study of the shapes of the tibial and femoral articular surfaces in sagittal, frontal and coronal planes which was performed on cadaver knees using two techniques, MRI and computer interpolation of sections of the articular surfaces acquired by a three-dimensional digitiser.

The findings using MRI, confirmed in a previous study by dissection, were the same as those using the digitiser. Thus both methods appear to be valid anatomical tools.

The tibial and femoral articular surfaces can be divided into anterior segments, contacting from 0° to 20 ± 10° of flexion, and posterior segments, contacting from 20 ± 10° to 120° of flexion. The medial and lateral compartments are asymmetrical, particularly anteriorly. Posteromedially, the femur is spherical and is located in a conforming, but partly deficient, tibial socket. Posterolaterally, it is circular only in the sagittal section and the tibia is flat centrally, sloping downwards both anteriorly and posteriorly to receive the meniscal horns. Anteromedially, the femur is convex with a sagittal radius larger than that posteriorly, while the tibia is flat sloping upwards and forwards. Anterolaterally, both the femoral and tibial surfaces are largely deficient.

These shapes suggest that medially the femur can rotate on the tibia through three axes intersecting in the middle of the femoral sphere, but that the sphere can only translate anteroposteriorly and even then to a limited extent. Laterally, the femur can freely translate anteroposteriorly, but can only rotate around a transverse axis for that part of the arc, i.e., near extension, during which it comes into contact with the tibia through its flattened distal/medial surface as against its spherical posterior surface.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 82-B, Issue 8 | Pages 1189 - 1195
1 Nov 2000
Iwaki H Pinskerova V Freeman MAR

In six unloaded cadaver knees we used MRI to determine the shapes of the articular surfaces and their relative movements. These were confirmed by dissection.

Medially, the femoral condyle in sagittal section is composed of the arcs of two circles and that of the tibia of two angled flats. The anterior facets articulate in extension. At about 20° the femur ‘rocks’ to articulate through the posterior facets. The medial femoral condyle does not move anteroposteriorly with flexion to 110°.

Laterally, the femoral condyle is composed entirely, or almost entirely, of a single circular facet similar in radius and arc to the posterior medial facet. The tibia is roughly flat. The femur tends to roll backwards with flexion.

The combination during flexion of no antero-posterior movement medially (i.e., sliding) and backward rolling (combined with sliding) laterally equates to internal rotation of the tibia around a medial axis with flexion. About 5° of this rotation may be obligatory from 0° to 10° flexion; thereafter little rotation occurs to at least 45°. Total rotation at 110° is about 20°, most if not all of which can be suppressed by applying external rotation to the tibia at 90°.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 82-B, Issue 8 | Pages 1196 - 1198
1 Nov 2000
Hill PF Vedi V Williams A Iwaki H Pinskerova V Freeman MAR

In 13 unloaded living knees we confirmed the findings previously obtained in the unloaded cadaver knee during flexion and external rotation/internal rotation using MRI. In seven loaded living knees with the subjects squatting, the relative tibiofemoral movements were similar to those in the unloaded knee except that the medial femoral condyle tended to move about 4 mm forwards with flexion. Four of the seven loaded knees were studied during flexion in external and internal rotation. As predicted, flexion (squatting) with the tibia in external rotation suppressed the internal rotation of the tibia which had been observed during unloaded flexion.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 82-B, Issue 8 | Pages 1100 - 1102
1 Nov 2000
Pinskerova V Maquet P Freeman MAR